downwardsfromzero wrote:It looks like you're doing pretty well with what you've managed to get through the process so far, tbh. I find it very cool that you have access to Pan. cyan.!
One of the benefits of living in Asia
All I can find locally for this is eye drops that contain chloramphenicol. I generally prefer doing no-pour-agar plates (ie sterilize the agar in the plates or jars in the PC rather than pouring into them after sterilization) because pouring inside my tiny SAB is a nightmare. Do you think I would need to add these drop after or could i just drop them in when I am prep'ing the agar?
downwardsfromzero wrote:You might just have been lucky but there's a chance you've selected for more vigorous and contam resistant genetics with the myc that you have.
I hope so, because the plate that I pulled this from actually looked weird and bubbly when I first did the transfer and I thought it was a bust. But after a couple of days, the healthy stuff had spread across the plate, so I did a few more transfers from that and cleaned it up. This isolate which I am playing with has pretty vigorous growth, it colonizes the plates quickly and evenly, whereas the other transfers showed patchy and uneven growth, and some would just stall. Is that usual for pans?
downwardsfromzero wrote:One more thing - you should ditch those plates with obvious contams much more quickly. Dump them in a bleach bath for safety's sake, particularly the one with the big black blob.
will do, this batch was a bit of a mess because I had just ordered these glass petri's but I couldn't get the damn parafilm to circle the plate and seal them properly, probably because they are tiny 60mm dishes and the parafilm kept slipping off the edge. So i got fed up and just dropped them in a zip lock. I will probably ditch them all.
downwardsfromzero wrote:Would you say the contamination appears at the inoculation sites or is there a chance that some of it is airborne?
Definitely inoculation site. You can kind of see that in the pic of the jars above where there are rings of whiteish contam encircling the little black specs. Eventually, satellite colonies and all sorts of other nastiness appear if I leave them long enough, but the day after inoculation you can clearly see stuff spreading from each spore chunk.
I was also wondering if overdoing it with the spores also limits my chances of success, I scape loads onto the plates, sometimes just leaving them where they land and sometimes using an inoculation loop to smear them around. One would assume that more spores = greater chance of success, but in this case, because they are so dirty the more spores there are the more contam as well?
I was also wondering, since pan's love straw and manure, rather than starting with agar I could try to inoculate some sterilized manure or straw in small jars and then transfer from that if anything takes to clean it up?